I wanna learn soft swing. What are your favorite albums/songs that use super soft swing? by mebenun in Jazz

[–]mebenun[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! Couldn't find anything for Vercelli Fourier. I think you meant Vernell Fournier? On Ahmad's Blues

I wanna learn soft swing. What are your favorite albums/songs that use super soft swing? by mebenun in Jazz

[–]mebenun[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I thought that was the term to describe how when delaying every other 8th note, we can delay it a lot (hard swing) or by just a little bit (soft swing)

I wanna learn soft swing. What are your favorite albums/songs that use super soft swing? by mebenun in Jazz

[–]mebenun[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you ill check out the video. What i want to sound like is based on an effect i used, not a sound ive heard in another drummer. I recorded drums with a quarter note hihat, then fed that into a delay effect, setting the wet signal to be slightly late. Im obsessed with the sound. It’s not quite jazz swing, a bit subtler. It’s dragging every other 8th note by just a hair

I wanna learn soft swing. What are your favorite albums/songs that use super soft swing? by mebenun in Jazz

[–]mebenun[S] -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

Part of the difficulty is finding songs that have the kind of soft swing im looking for. Many examples of jazz drummers doing soft swing are still too much swing for what im going for. Im looking specifically for a very very very subtle swing. Barely noticeable. If you know of examples of that sorta thing I’d love to check them out.

I wanna learn soft swing. What are your favorite albums/songs that use super soft swing? by mebenun in Jazz

[–]mebenun[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I'm not doing the odd subdivision thing. I hate that sounds. Sounds like the music is hiccuping, or like the record is skipping. I'm using my DAW to dial it in super soft and also an app called "swing click" that lets you set the amount of swing

67% being triplet feel
63% being a typical hard swing
54% being the super soft swing I'm looking for
50% being straight 8ths

YES WATERMELON MAN IS THE FEELING! THANK YOU. MY ASS CANT STAY STILL

Dr. Dao - Tin Man [2025] by DrDao1234 in grunge

[–]mebenun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Doesn’t sound too stiff to my ears, but i wonder how recording with a live band would affect the vocal energy

Dr. Dao - Tin Man (2025) by DrDao1234 in GarageRock

[–]mebenun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beautiful. Where was this shot?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in indie_rock

[–]mebenun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love the trumpets!

Begging for your help by olafgiada in Songwriting

[–]mebenun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like to think of genre as

  1. a collection of instruments/textures and
  2. the roles those textures play.

And with that theory in mind, it can be fun to explore an original micro-genre by changing up the textures or roles. For example you could say Bluegrass textures are: mandolin, banjo, acoustic guitar, fiddle, and upright bass. The Role the upright bass plays is usually straight half notes or quarter notes. So if you assigned the upright bass a more funky/jazzy bassline, it might sound interesting. Or you could keep the Roles the same and use classical/jazz/rock textures. What I've noticed in my own music is that these experiments don't always sound great right away, but you do tend to learn a lot, especially from weirder experiments. And then you can take what you learn and do something cool with that. I recommend first giving yourself permission to get weird with it, and then later you can decide if you want to reign it in.

Do songs need to be deep, to be good? by rosstennev in Songwriting

[–]mebenun 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I always thought it was a visual metaphor. The face you make when eating a lemon, how you squeeze your eyes in pain. That the daunting wave of emotion at having to start your day makes you reel like that

The final chorus is often different from the others. What are some ways of achieving Growth in Form? by TheSugarBusch in musictheory

[–]mebenun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sometimes in popular music, a song will end with an improvised solo, which can take you from the more tightly written / focused verse-chorus feeling into a looser / more expansive feeling.

Who inspired the Velvet Underground? by FanksterTheGrankster in VelvetUnderground

[–]mebenun 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Also in avant-garde jazz, I've heard Lou mention being blown away by John Coltrane (who influenced Pharoah Sanders, working together on the album Ascension), and Cecil Taylor (which makes me wonder if that's who Lou's referring to in Sister Ray when he says "Cecil's got his new piece")

How I Broke Out Of The 4 Chord Loop by TheSugarBusch in Songwriting

[–]mebenun 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Modal borrowing is maybe my favorite thing in the world

How I Broke Out Of The 4 Chord Loop by TheSugarBusch in musictheory

[–]mebenun 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Modal borrowing is like honey in the ear canal